The alarm bells went off for Javier in June, when he walked five batters and gave up four runs in 2 1/3 innings in a win over the Mets. He gave up 14 runs and 17 hits in 8 1/3 innings in his next two starts -- both wins because the Astros were scoring a ton of runs -- and that was enough to send Miller and the staff to the drawing board.
"It's like, OK, he's not really getting the strikeout totals we'd expect with him, not really getting the swings and misses we'd expect with him," Miller said. "The velocity is OK, in a decent range. You look at year over year changes, there's some subtle things he's doing differently with his delivery that mattered and just trying to line up his lower-half mechanics a little better. He's been able to do that for the last couple of months but not put together the total. We're expecting him to put the total package here going forward."
There was another issue to consider, too: workload.
Javier threw a career-high 161 1/3 innings last year, including the playoffs, and then got ramped up early in the spring to represent the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic. The Astros signed him to five-year, $64 million contract extension at the start of spring camp that will take him through the 2027 season. Houston had locked up a potential future ace.
But now he wasn't pitching like one. He had a 7.27 ERA and a 1.63 WHIP in 13 starts from June 21-Sept. 9. Opponents had an OPS of .881 and he'd allowed 14 homers in that span.
"You're scratching your head," Miller said. "He's saying subjectively he feels good, he feels strong, he feels like he's on time -- all these things. It's a little frustrating for both him and us. You start thinking of what's going on and then you go back to the workload from last year, pitching into November last year, the early crank up with the WBC this year, the contract.
"You start wondering, what could be going on differently, maybe not even physically but mentally that's causing the differences? Nothing really stuck out, so we put our nose to the grindstone and kept working and hopefully we found something, and it clicks and finishing strong was big for him."
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